J
Johann
Guest
Saints Preserved Blameless
Christians are "sanctified wholly" in their desires and
intentions, and that brings us to the meaning of "preserved
blameless." It is not that blamelessness which the covenant of works
required, but that of the covenant of grace wherein God accepts the
will for the deed (Nehemiah 1:11; 2 Corinthians 8:12). God accepts
the deed by the will. He interprets as perfect the man who desires to
be perfect, and He calls that man perfect who desires to have all his
imperfections removed.
It is sad that so few have been taught to
distinguish between legal and evangelical blamelessness.
When
God’s Word says that the parents of John the Baptist walked "in all
the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless" (Luke
1:6).......
it does not mean that they lived sinlessly, as verse 20 shows, but
that such was their sincere desire and earnest endeavor that they
habitually walked in conscientious obedience to God and behaved in
such a manner in the general tenor of their conduct that none could
charge them with any open sin.
The word blameless in such passages as 1 Corinthians 1:8;
Philippians 2:15 and 1 Thessalonians 3:13 should be compared with
"Blessed are the undefiled in the way" (Ps. 119:1). The word
blameless here is to be understood according to the tenor of the new
covenant, which does not exclude (as the covenant of works did)
God’s exercise of mercy and the pardon of sin (see Psalm 130:3-4).
The prayer which Christ has given us to use bids us ask not only for
deliverance from temptation but for daily pardon. If God dealt with
us according to the strict rigor of His law and required absolute
"undefiledness," none would escape His condemnation.
Evangelical
undefiledness must be understood as the sincerity of our obedience
and refrainment from that which would give others occasion to
justly charge us with wrongdoing.
While the Christian honestly and
earnestly endeavors to show himself approved to God, while he is
truly humble regarding his failures and penitently confesses them,
while he diligently seeks to walk in the law of the Lord, he is
accounted "blameless," or "undefiled," in the gospel sense of those
words
Pink.
Christians are "sanctified wholly" in their desires and
intentions, and that brings us to the meaning of "preserved
blameless." It is not that blamelessness which the covenant of works
required, but that of the covenant of grace wherein God accepts the
will for the deed (Nehemiah 1:11; 2 Corinthians 8:12). God accepts
the deed by the will. He interprets as perfect the man who desires to
be perfect, and He calls that man perfect who desires to have all his
imperfections removed.
It is sad that so few have been taught to
distinguish between legal and evangelical blamelessness.
When
God’s Word says that the parents of John the Baptist walked "in all
the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless" (Luke
1:6).......
it does not mean that they lived sinlessly, as verse 20 shows, but
that such was their sincere desire and earnest endeavor that they
habitually walked in conscientious obedience to God and behaved in
such a manner in the general tenor of their conduct that none could
charge them with any open sin.
The word blameless in such passages as 1 Corinthians 1:8;
Philippians 2:15 and 1 Thessalonians 3:13 should be compared with
"Blessed are the undefiled in the way" (Ps. 119:1). The word
blameless here is to be understood according to the tenor of the new
covenant, which does not exclude (as the covenant of works did)
God’s exercise of mercy and the pardon of sin (see Psalm 130:3-4).
The prayer which Christ has given us to use bids us ask not only for
deliverance from temptation but for daily pardon. If God dealt with
us according to the strict rigor of His law and required absolute
"undefiledness," none would escape His condemnation.
Evangelical
undefiledness must be understood as the sincerity of our obedience
and refrainment from that which would give others occasion to
justly charge us with wrongdoing.
While the Christian honestly and
earnestly endeavors to show himself approved to God, while he is
truly humble regarding his failures and penitently confesses them,
while he diligently seeks to walk in the law of the Lord, he is
accounted "blameless," or "undefiled," in the gospel sense of those
words
Pink.